The US Navy is seeking permission to kill, permanently injure, or otherwise seriously harm whales and dolphins more than 31 million times over the next five years throughout Southern California, Hawaii, the Gulf of Mexico, and along the Atlantic Coast...

Stop the slaughter of dolphins through deep water sonar technology.--Peru's environmental activists are reporting that the number of dead dolphins washing up on Peruvian shores has reached a record high. In a single month, 615 dolphins turned up dead on t

Mass dolphin deaths off the coasts of Peru and the US Gulf are being linked to sonar used in seismic surveying for offshore oil drilling. The deaths are violent, caused by hemorrhaging in the inner ear. It is as outrageous as Japan's Taiji slaughters.

The US National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)has announced a new initiative and important step forward to mitigate harm from Navy mid-frequencysonar (and potentially from other sources of noise in the ocean).

Tell the National Marine Fisheries Service to better protect whales and dolphins from the Navy's dangerous sonar. The agency is finalizing plans that will allow the Navy to harass and injure tens of thousands of marine mammals along the coasts of

More than 50,000 people have demanded that oil and gas giant ExxonMobil and several other companies suspend damaging industrial activities that harm the Western Gray whale, one of the world's most critically endangered whales.

Today the Navy released its Record of Decision to begin construction of an undersea warfare training range right next to the only known calving grounds for the critically endangered right whale. Hunted nearly to extinction, North Atlantic right whales

You like whales? Me too. But the U.S. Navy apparently doesn't share our sentiments. If you haven't already, check out the following post and the links it features: The Whales vs. the Navy at the Supreme Court.

The safety of western Scotland's whales and dolphins has been called into question following an incident involving naval sonar. This took place during the major NATO military exercise, Joint Warrior, in Scottish waters.

Unfortunately for many whales, dolphins and other marine life, the use of underwater sonar (short for sound navigation and ranging) can lead to injury and even death. Sonar systems--first developed by the U.S. Navy to detect enemy submarines--generate